"One of the biggest strengths of Marden's book is its intelligent and lucid handling of complex theological idea ... . he offers fresh perspective and raises rich awareness of the possibilities opened up by a turn to the theological in Gothic Studies, all the while asserting theology's importance in understanding the Gothic's engagement with contemporary culture." (Eleanor Beal, Fantastika Journal, Vol. 4 (1), July, 2020)
"Both Gothic scholars and researchers of theology and literature should pay careful attention to this book and the ways in which it provides fresh insight into horror, and the surprising ways in which theology can help make sense of all aspects of culture." (Jonathan Greenaway, THE GLASS, Issue 32, 2020)
1. Introduction: Spectres of the Sacred.- 2. Gothic Heresies.- 3. 'There were some stains that could not be removed': Adam Nevill and the Stain of Sin.- 4. Much Ado About Nothing: Peter Straub and Privation.- 5. William Peter Blatty and the Presence of the Absent Christ.- 6. 'Time to let go of all the old things': Justin Cronin's Radically Orthodox Christology.- 7. Sympathy for the Devil: Gothic Goes to Hell.- 8. The Sense of No Ending: (Re)Reading the Apocalyptic Stephen King.- 9. Conclusion: The Gothic Sacred.
Simon Marsden is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Liverpool, UK. He writes widely on the relationships between literature and theology from the nineteenth century to the present and is the author of Emily Brontë and the Religious Imagination.